Describe the 1950’s and early 60’s Businessman and his lifestyle? How about the females?
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Transcript of Describe the 1950’s and early 60’s Businessman and his lifestyle? How about the females?
Describe the 1950’s and early 60’s Businessman and his lifestyle? How about the females?
How does the Hippie compare to the businessmen and women?
Hippies ran counter, or against the culture around them
As we view the following slides, record in your notes what the hippies
Valued
Promoted
Experimented with
1960s Counterculture
The Hippie Movement The term “hippie” comes
from being hip. You were either hip or you were a “square” or a “pig.”
Hippie were looking for an alternative way to live life.
Most hippies valued freedom, nature, intimacy, peace, sharing, and spirituality.
Hippie CultureThe Age of Aquarius
Flower Power
“Make Love, Not War”
Sexual Revolution (Free Love)
Marijuana and LSD ( Illegal Drugs)
Ragged Jeans, Tie-dye shirts,
Military garments, love beads
Long hair and beards
Many joined communes
Way of Life
Hippies wanted to distance themselves from mainstream ways of life.
They discarded possessions and often lived in parks or campsites in the woods.
Living like this made them feel free
Nudity was another form of freedom
Counterculture Fashion Hippies distanced themselves
from mainstream culture by their dress.
Colorful, flowing clothing, beads, headbands bellbottoms, and tie-dye were popular.
Men their hair and beards long or in afros.
Hippies were often called “longhairs”
San Francisco and Haight- Ashbury
San Francisco was the birthplace of the counterculture/hippy movement.
By 1965 hippies had taken over the Haight Ashbury district.
Haight Ashbury district contains Golden Gate Park home of the Trips Festival and “be-ins.”
This is a 20,000-strong be-in at Golden gate park in 1967
Hippy Music The most popular music of the time was psychedelic rock
Bands like Jefferson Airplane, Quicksilver Messenger Service, the Jimi Hendrix Experience and the Grateful Dead played free concerts at Golden Gate Park.
Concerts and be-ins were places for hippies to protest, socialize, dance, or take drugs.
At Woodstock over 250,000 hippies showed up to hear artists like Janis Joplin, The Who, Canned Heat, The Allman Brothers, and County Joe and the Fish.
Woodstock
Woodstock was not just a music concert. “For thousands who couldn’t even hear the music” it was a “profound religious experience.”
Why do you think that parents would not want their children listening to this music?
Drug Culture Drugs like marijuana and LSD were a big part of the
hippy/counterculture movement.
Using drugs made hippies feel like the were rebelling from mainstream society.
Timothy Leary (a Harvard professor) was an advocate of LSD.
LSD was created by a Swiss scientist, used by the CIA, and tested for use by psychiatrists before it became illegal.